eBay: Is sniping wise if I'm bidding minimum

You’re already participating via a program. Why is one that sends your bid at a particular time objectively different to one that you use to send your bid in at all? Particularly when it does nothing that you couldn’t do yourself arguably even better?

Wait, you can bid below the minimum bid? I’d never thought to do that… can you? I wouldn’t imagine ebay would let you.

ZJ

Oh, I see that the seller gets the bid, but it doesn’t show up on the auction… Huh.

Right now I’m bidding on something that hasn’t met the reserve, but the price is 10 dollars below the Buy It Now price. I hope he’ll sell it to me, or would he have to withdraw the item? I’m sorry- this is totally a hijack. We need an ebay sticky, dammit.

ZJ

Yeah, I pointed out I just really wanted that particular copy and didn’t use any sniping software, I just waited till the last minute. I think it was the possibility that I used software to do it that galled him :dubious:

ehh let em chip. If they pay $ .50 more than I was willing to pay then they can win. That’s why it my called my maximum bid. Bidding back and forth, checking every hour and staying in the lead manually only benefits the seller. IMO

I guess I can see trying not to draw attention to an item, but is there a way to search for items with only one bid?

If the auction ends without the reserve being met, the two of you have the option of coming to an agreement on price outside of eBay. He could also end the auction early to sell it to you. This is done, but I really don’t think it’s ethical. I know that when I sell things, I do get people asking me to end the auction early and sell it outright. I always decline. There has never been a time that the auction hasn’t ended up going for more than their offer.

So then you only bid the minimum possible bid each time you bid on something? Or do you not consider using the proxy service provided by eBay that automatically puts a bid in for you passively via a program to be passively participating via a program?

Isn’t it dangerous as well? I understand it’s a common scam to pretend to be the seller and e-mail the 2nd highest bidder to say “first bidder pulled out, you want it?” The same could be done to the highest bidder who did not meet the reserve.

There’s a system within eBay for offering the 2nd highest bidder a second chance when the highest bidder flakes out. You don’t have to go outside the system. I just did that a couple of days ago: I bid the minimum, somebody outbid me, I walked away, and then I got a “2nd chance offer” to buy it for what I originally bid.

Yes, it can be. I don’t do this personally. However, if I did the same self imposed rules would apply as in any eBay auction. I make sure the person has good feedback. I make sure that the item picture is clear. I don’t bid on items where the person is taking in extra money through shipping or “Paypal fees” (which are against eBay rules). Let’s face it though, buying anything on eBay does take a leap of faith.